what oil do u likeThe T6 has much more calcium in it for nasty diesels, which makes it terrible in direct injected engines. Just say no. I have direct experience and two broken engines before the problem was discovered by the aftermarket.
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what oil do u likeThe T6 has much more calcium in it for nasty diesels, which makes it terrible in direct injected engines. Just say no. I have direct experience and two broken engines before the problem was discovered by the aftermarket.
Pretty sure T6 has since been reformulated and is safe to run on gasoline DI engines.what oil do u like
I feel any synthetic is just fine for any stock Ford engine- no matter how cheap.This is not totally true. Lower quality synthetics use tons of VI to get to the Target viscosity. The more VI used, the more it will thin out of original spec through driving cycles between oil changes no matter the brand. mPAO has a better Viscocity Index (vs POA base oil) and maintains its original viscosity during its duty cycle.
I never said it did.“W” in multigrade oil never means “weight”, its stands for winter.
Speaking of "Not totally true"All oil thins out as it gets warmer.
5W-30 is does not start thin and then thicken when warm.
That’s always a controversial question! Really, any synthetic API rated SP is good with me. I’m currently running 5w30 SP SuperTech Advanced or Mobile1 Advanced from the local Walmart in all my 4-wheeled vehicles. I also have some Redline 5w40 SN and Motorcraft 5w50 SN for my bikes.what oil do u like
Eric,I feel any synthetic is just fine for any stock Ford engine- no matter how cheap.
The VIs breaking down is why I would not recommend a 0W-40 vs a 5W-30, as they are more modifiers in the 0W-40.
I never said it did.
Speaking of "Not totally true"
What does "thicken" mean- exactly? Scientifically define that for motor oil please. I didn't use phases like "thicken". I specifically said it will act as a certain weight when hot and a certain weight when cold- as that's the only proper way to discuss it.
The improper way is to discuss it is to use words like "thick" and "thin". Why ?
A 5W-30 is clearly "thicker" than a straight 5W at 200F. So does it thicken as it warms up, or not?
The weight of the oil at a particular temp is the proper terminology to use. Thick and thin means nothing.